Girdle

(g hard). A good name is better than a golden girdle.
A good name is better than money. It used to be customary to carry
money in the girdle, and a girdle of gold meant a “purse of gold.” The
French proverb,

“All children under the girdle at the time of marriage are held to be
legitimate.” —Notes and Queries.

If he be angry, he knows how to turn his girdle (Much Ado about
Nothing, v. 1). If he is angry, let him prepare himself to fight, if he
likes. Before wrestlers, in ancient times, engaged in combat, they
turned the buckle of their girdle behind them. Thus, Sir Ralph Winwood
writes to Secretary Cecil:

“I said `What I spoke was not to make him angry.' He replied, `If I
were angry, I might turn the buckle of my girdle behind me.”' —Dec. 17, 1802.

He has a large mouth but small girdle. Great expenses but small
means. The girdle is the purse or purse-pocket. (See above.)

He has undone her girdle.

Taken her for his wedded wife. The Roman bride wore a chaplet of
flowers on her head, and a girdle of sheep's wool about her waist. A
part of the marriage ceremony was for the bridegroom to loose this
girdle. (Vaughan: Golden Grove.)

The Persian regulation-girdle.

In Persia a new sort of “Procrustes Bed” is adopted, according to
Kemper. One of the officers of the king is styled the “chief holder of
the girdle,” and his business is to measure the ladies of the harem by
a sort of regulation-girdle. If any lady has outgrown the standard,
she is reduced, like a jockey, by spare diet; but, if she falls short
thereof, she is fatted up, like a Strasburg goose, to regulation size.

Girdle

(Florimel's). The prize of a grand tournament in which
Sir Satyrane and several others took part. It was dropped by Florimel,
picked up by Sir Satyrane, and employed by him to bind the monster sent
in her pursuit; but it came again into the hands of the knight, who
kept it in a golden casket. It was a “gorgeous girdle made by Vulcan
for Venus, embossed with pearls and precious stones;” but its chief
virtue was

It gave the virtue of chaste love,
And wifehood true to all that it did bear;
But whosoever contrary doth prove
Might not the same about her middle wear,
But it would loose, or else asunder tear.

Spenser: Faerie Queene, book iii. canto vii. 31.

King Arthur's Drinking Horn, and the Court Mantel in Orlando
Furioso, possessed similar virtues.

Girdle

(St. Colman's) would meet only round the chaste.

In Ireland it yet remains to be proved whether
St. Colman's girdle has not lost its virtue